The three-peat success of the world champion Bronx Bombers has taught New Yorkers life lessons on how to win, experts say.

The Yankees “are a great example on how a corporation should run,” said Beth-Ann Gillery, a Brooklyn career coach, whose job is to get clients on the right track.

“I tell my clients to look at a ballplayer who isn’t getting the runs. What do they do? They keep going. They don’t take it personally,” Gillery said.

“I suspect these players did not take their successes as luck. They believed in themselves and knew that as a team they could do more.”

Here’s how Gillery and other experts such as psychologists and psychiatrists rate the champs’ lineup in terms of learning how to win off the diamond:

* The fiery, hard-hitting right fielder Paul O’Neill “kept his temper under control, showing his dedication,” despite rumors his contract may not be renewed, said psychologist Alan Hilfer of Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn. O’Neill came through with a smashing Subway Series performance.

* Scrappy veteran Luis Sojo, the utilityman who rose to the occasion as a team player, slapping the Series-winning hit in Game 5, ” is an example of someone who is aware of his capabilities – he stayed motivated and wanted to contribute,” said Charles Maher, a Rutgers University psychology professor and team shrink for the Cleveland Indians.

* Bernie Williams, the team’s superstar center fielder, was hitless in the Series until he smacked a home run in the clincher at Shea.

“He accepted it and followed the plan, and played knowing at one point he would produce – and he did,” Maher said. “That’s sound mental discipline.”